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Penn
State Field Geology has been and continues to
be a capstone experience that integrates
previously-studied subdisciplines of the
geosciences and facilitates visualization of
geologic history from outcrops in the canyons, mountains,
and plains of the American West. For
2006, the camp was shifted to the environs of Coldigioco in the Apennines of Italy. The
course is built around a series of intensive
mapping projects that require solution of geologic puzzles
with all the tools and concepts at the
student's command.
But field camp is also fun in other ways. A group of
people have to live, work, and play together
through wind, rain, sun, cold, vehicle
breakdowns, deadlines, dirty laundry, and
everything else that goes with a journey that
lasts many weeks
and involves different living venues.
Ultimately they find joy in their shared
trials and triumphs. Walter Ebaugh (1971
field camp) has summed it up: "It
was surely the best. I learned almost
everything I know about geology that summer."
If you
remember field camp that way, these webpages
are designed to let you reminisce but also to
reconnect with your past alumni friends.
These pages are maintained by Dave Eggler.
Make YOUR page more
informative; email
him with stories and pictures.
He'll also scan photos and slides and return
them. Or just send an email saying your
found the webpages.
In
addition to those named on individual pages,
general thanks
to Barry Voight, Derrill Kerrick, Rudy
Slingerland, Kevin (Doc) Hoover and,
especially, Duff
Gold for photographs and materials.
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